Business News
‘Big Super’s’ investments supercharge retirement savings and the Australian economy

‘Big Super’s’ investments supercharge retirement savings and the Australian economy
Industry Super Funds’ unique exposure to unlisted assets – investments like property, airports, agriculture, and manufacturing – could lead to its members having more than $130,000 extra at retirement.
The ‘How Industry Super Investments Supports the Economy’ report highlights some of industry super funds’ $500 billion in local investments and details how industry funds now hold major stakes in almost every corner of Australia’s economy.
Industry super funds $100 billion in Australian unlisted assets not only provides excellent investment returns to members, but they also create jobs, increase productivity and fuel economic growth.
The higher exposure to unlisted assets has meant that on a risk adjusted basis, a 40-year-old member would have about $11,000 more over the past 10 years. At retirement this could be worth about $137,000.
Through their investments, industry funds are helping to boost domestic manufacturing capability and supporting agriculture and our regions. Industry funds have more than $3.3 billion invested in Australian agriculture, and over $29.5 billion invested in Australian companies with manufacturing capability.
Renewable energy projects industry super funds hold stakes in, can power almost 800,000 homes, and delivers 3.6 million tonnes of carbon cuts a year.
Increasingly funds are lending to Australian businesses either directly or via non-bank lenders – supporting local companies and start-ups that many banks won’t and filling a critical gap in the lending market.
The super system cushioned the economic blows of the Coronavirus downturn and the Global Financial Crisis before it, then provided funding so local businesses could get back on their feet.
After the Coronavirus downturn in 2020, Australian companies raised more than $8 billion in equity, supported by the country’s industry funds, across a range of sectors including those the pandemic hit hardest.
Stable policy settings are essential if the Australian economy is to continue reaping all these benefits. Busting open super for purposes other than retirement would have a long-term impact on how funds invest and may make it more difficult to support certain local industries or large-scale infrastructure projects.
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